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She made the sign of the cross over the child, wiped its nose with her fingers and went up to her husband.
He whispered: 'We must get him across.'
'Into the house...here?'
'Where else?'
'Into the cowshed; we can lead the calf out and lay him down on the bench, let him lie in state there, if he likes...such a one as he has been!'
'Monika!'
'Eh?'
'We ought to get him out there.'
'Well, fetch him out then.'
'All right...but...'
'You're afraid, what?'
'Idiot...d.a.m.ned...'
'What else?'
'It's dark...'
'If you wait till it's day, people will see you.'
'Let's go together.'
'You go if you are so keen.'
'Are you coming, you carrion, or are you not?' he shouted at her; 'he's your father, not mine.' And he flung out of the room in a rage.
The woman followed him without a word.
When they entered the pigsty, a breath of horror struck them, like the exhalation from a corpse. The old man was lying there, cold as ice; one half of his body had frozen on to the floor; they had to tear him off forcibly before they could drag him across the threshold and into the yard.
Antkowa began to tremble violently at the sight of him; he looked terrifying in the light of the grey dawn, on the white coverlet of snow, with his anguished face, wide-open eyes, and drooping tongue on which the teeth had closed firmly. There were blue patches on his skin, and he was covered with filth from head to foot.
'Take hold,' whispered the man, bending over him. 'How horribly cold he is!'
The icy wind which rises just before the sun, blew into their faces, and shook the snow off the swinging twigs with a dry crackle.
Here and there a star was still visible against the leaden background of the sky. From the village came the creaking noise of the hauling of water, and the c.o.c.ks crew as if the weather were going to change.
Antkowa shut her eyes and covered her hands with her ap.r.o.n, before she took hold of the old man's feet; they could hardly lift him, he was so heavy. They had barely put him down on a bench when she fled back into the house, throwing out a linen-rag to her husband to cover the corpse.
The children were busy sc.r.a.ping potatoes; she waited impatiently at the door.
'Have done...come in!... Lord, how long you are!'
'We must get some one to come and wash him,' she said, laying the breakfast, when he had come in.
'I will fetch the deaf-mute.'
'Don't go to work to-day.'
'Go...no, not I...'
They did not speak again, and ate their breakfast without appet.i.te, although as a rule they finished their four quarts of soup between them.
When they went out into the yard they walked quickly, and did not turn their heads towards the other side. They were worried, but did not know why; they felt no remorse; it was perhaps more a vague fear of the corpse, or fear of death, that shook them and made them silent.
When it was broad day, Antek fetched the village deaf-mute, who washed and dressed the old man, laid him out, and put a consecrated candle at his head.
Antek then went to give notice to the priest and to the Soltys of his father-in-law's death and his own inability to pay for the funeral.
'Let Tomek bury him; he has got all the money.'
The news of the old man's death spread rapidly throughout the village.
People soon began to a.s.semble in little groups to look at the corpse.
They murmured a prayer, shook their heads, and went off to talk it over.
It was not till towards evening that Tomek, the other son-in-law, under pressure of public opinion, declared himself willing to pay for the funeral.
On the third day, shortly before this was to take place, Tomek's wife made her appearance at Antek's cottage.
In the pa.s.sage she almost came nose to nose with her sister, who was just taking a pail of dishwater out to the cowshed.
'Blessed be Jesus Christ,' she murmured, and kept her hand on the door-handle.
'Now: look at that... soul of a Judas!' Antkowa put the pail down hard.
'She's come to spy about here. Got rid of the old one somehow, didn't you? Hasn't he given everything to you... and you dare show yourself here, you trull! Have you come for the rest of the rags he left here, what?'
'I bought him a new sukmana at Whitsuntide, he can keep that on, of course, but I must have the sheepskin back, because it has been bought with money I have earned in the sweat of my brow,' Tomekowa replied calmly.
'Have it back, you mangy dog, have it back?' screamed Antkowa. 'I'll give it you, you'll see what you will have...' and she looked round for an object that would serve her purpose. 'Take it away? You dare! You have crawled to him and lickspittled till he became the idiot he was and made everything over to you and wronged me, and then...'
'Everybody knows that we bought the land from him, there are witnesses...'
'Bought it? Look at her! You mean to say you're not afraid to lie like that under G.o.d's living eyes? Bought it! Cheats, that's what you are, thieves, dogs! You stole the money from him first, and then.... Didn't you make him eat out of the pig-pail? Adam is a witness that he had to pick the potatoes out of the pig-pail, ha! You've let him sleep in the cowshed, because, you said, he stank so that you couldn't eat. Fifteen acres of land and a dower-life like that... for so much property! And you've beaten him too, you swine, you monkey!'
'Hold your snout, or I'll shut it for you and make you remember, you sow, you trull!'
'Come on then, come on, you dest.i.tute creature!' 'I... dest.i.tute?'